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Re: plug and chug



That is nitpicking IMO. You are free to reword the details. The
point is that many students turn off their brains and answer with a
negative acceleration.


On Sun, 28 Jul 2002, John Mallinckrodt wrote:

1. The same skier comes off the hill and stops on a level spot. Her
friend pushes the skier forward with a force of 15.0 N. Find the
skier's acceleration. (The coefficient of friction was given as
.0500, the skier's mass as 75.0 kg).

<NITPICK> I think we may have discussed this one before. My best
answer would be that the problem is ill-posed. Assuming that the
skier is initially at rest (which the problem seems to be clear
about), then her friend may "push on the skier's back" with a force
of 15 N but her friend can't "push the skier forward" with a force
that small.</NITPICK>

Of course, it does depend on how you interpret the words but I think
most people would interpret the words as implying that the skier
*does* move forward. I don't mind "tricky" questions in general, but
trickiness shouldn't depend upon the purposeful choice of misleading
words and I suspect that the class results could be significantly
different if the words "the skier forward" were replaced with "on the
skier's back."

--
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